I've been trying to figure this out. Thank you so much!
Thank you. Thank you. Understanding that made my day.
Thank you. It worked like charm.
Outstanding! Thank you so much!
The first site we tried and it answered my question perfectly.
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I speak from example on this one because I have not had health care for 3 years. Obviously, you are not required to have health insurance of any kind. However, you must be aware that you will be paying for any care that is given to you. Our situation involved two visits to the ER after allergic reactions to two different medications took place. The ER made sure that my wife was stable (as they are obligated to do) and we were sent on our merry way. We did receive a bill a week later for the ER visit and a bill for the doctor`s fee.
What you also need to be aware of though is that many times you can call the hospital and negotiate with them to knock the total owed down. They should also be willing to work out a payment plan with you. So, they don`t necessarily expect you to pay the full amount right away.
The best scenario is to avoid injury and sickness (but obviously that`s not always possible). if you have to go to the doctor or the hospital, you can rest assured that their primary concern is to help you recover and get back on your feet. They are required to help you. So don`t fret about that. Once you receive a bill, call them and see if they`d be willing to reduce the amount. Tell them your story and they may lighten your load for you. Then work out a payment plan with them for whatever you settle on. I hope that helps.
Mike Ravencliff 273550.

In 2007-2008 it was 9 % ~21bil.- http://www.fin.gc.ca/taxdollar/09/index-eng.asp
* CHT cash levels are set in legislation up to 2013-14 and grow by 6 per cent annually as a result of the automatic escalator.
* The CHT cash transfer will reach $24 billion in 2009-10 and will reach over $30 billion in 2013-14.
* Provinces and territories also receive CHT support through a tax transfer (see Tax Transfers). CHT tax transfers amount to $13.9 billion in 2009-10, and will continue to grow in line with the economy.
http://www.fin.gc.ca/fedprov/cht-eng.asp.

I was just told 80% and I sure would like to know the truth. But the 80% is total taxes and it provides a house, a car, health insurance, and other community services. If anyone has a clear answer I would like to hear. I am being told that our proposed Universal Health Care bill is going to raise taxes 15%. What is truth?

Private health care is expensive but considered essential. Public hospitals are a disaster and the waiting lists are very long. If anything happens to you if you don`t have private health care / insurance, it could be a matter of life and death.

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